Okay, I'm in need of some advice from someone wiser and older than me, because there are some big things happening in my life right now. First, after talking to my teacher and school counselor today, I found out that I am ahead of my peers and need less credits than them to graduate. My teacher said that I am going to graduate early next year; probably at the end of the first quarter, or, at the latest, at the end of the first semester.

That being said, I have even less time than I anticipated to decide on what I want to do in my life and what direction to go in after I graduate. I also found out that my family qualifies for an economic-aid program that would give me a $20,000 student loan at an interest rate which my father says is "pretty reasonable." My mom says that we are going to take it, and she wants me to think about what I want to do with the money. She's recommending that I purchase my fantasized-about Macbook Pro Laptop when we get the loan next year, and thus keeping the money I've been saving up for one for myself. I kind of want to use half the loan to purchase myself the most fuel efficient car I could find brand new, that way I could attain a job more easily and thus make more money, and save the other half of the loan for a rainy day, but my mother doesn't entirely agree with me.

What should I do? And how should I use this time to decide upon what I want to do after I graduate?

My thoughts on what to do? I'd recommend skipping the loan and going to community college for 2 years. I got a loan in 2000-2001 so as to attend a private Christian college. Worst mistake I ever made. Tens of thousands a year in tuition to "learn" English and Algebra? Whatever. Go to community college for your general ed courses. Between grants and possible scholarships it shouldn't cost you a thing, and you might even get some money back, depending on your situation.

My advice: Don't buy either the mac or the car with the loan. To qualify for student loans you need to be a student. Borrow only as much as you need for schooling. Don't overlook community colleges for basic and intro courses. Some of the best advice I have ever received in terms of what to do with one's life was, "Find something that needs to be done and do it."

My thoughts on what to do? I'd recommend skipping the loan and going to community college for 2 years. I got a loan in 2000-2001 so as to attend a private Christian college. Worst mistake I ever made. Tens of thousands a year in tuition to "learn" English and Algebra? Whatever. Go to community college for your general ed courses. Between grants and possible scholarships it shouldn't cost you a thing, and you might even get some money back, depending on your situation.

Agree with this.

In fact I think he could probably pay 2 years of CC with the 20k, maybe even less. Then just transfer after 2 years to a University.

But dang bro, tens of thousands a year in tuition for a private Christian college? You got scammed.

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“There is your brother, naked, crying, and you stand there confused over the choice of an attractive floor covering.”

Community college sounds good, how does that work? If it's cheap and works, then I'll take anything. Screw prestige!

Are there community or vocational schools near you? Contact the admissions departments and speak with an admissions counselor. They will walk you through the process. The financial aid office will be able to help you apply for grants and scholarships.

Community college sounds good, how does that work? If it's cheap and works, then I'll take anything. Screw prestige!

Fill out info on the FAFSA site early in the spring before the year you plan on attending, then just walk in to the local community college before the semester starts (just do a search on google for one in your county), and say you'd like to sign up for classes. They'll do a placement test and you can go from there. The local one here charges about $1,500 a semester for full time tuition and fees, and maybe another $200-600 for books (depending on how you buy them).

Don't get a liberal arts degree. Please. Religion, History and all of that is great. Do it on your own time. Make sure your education points toward a career. Know what your profession is before you start.

Don't get a liberal arts degree. Please. Religion, History and all of that is great. Do it on your own time. Make sure your education points toward a career. Know what your profession is before you start.

Liberal arts degrees can provide careers, so long as one plans to go to grad school first.

My thoughts on what to do? I'd recommend skipping the loan and going to community college for 2 years. I got a loan in 2000-2001 so as to attend a private Christian college. Worst mistake I ever made. Tens of thousands a year in tuition to "learn" English and Algebra? Whatever. Go to community college for your general ed courses. Between grants and possible scholarships it shouldn't cost you a thing, and you might even get some money back, depending on your situation.

Excellent advice.

SKIP THE LOAN.

Figure something else out. Community college = cheap (well in the terms of college). Local, get used books.

Community college sounds good, how does that work? If it's cheap and works, then I'll take anything. Screw prestige!

Fill out info on the FAFSA site early in the spring before the year you plan on attending, then just walk in to the local community college before the semester starts (just do a search on google for one in your county), and say you'd like to sign up for classes. They'll do a placement test and you can go from there. The local one here charges about $1,500 a semester for full time tuition and fees, and maybe another $200-600 for books (depending on how you buy them).

Yes also that money can be made for community college at simple jobs in your home town. When you graduate, you won't have $$$ to pay back with interest. Most community colleges go towards associate degrees, some go to bachelors. Debt free all the way.... In those early college years and high school graduation years, the loan sharks are after you BIG time.

Don't get a liberal arts degree. Please. Religion, History and all of that is great. Do it on your own time. Make sure your education points toward a career. Know what your profession is before you start.

And I agree with community college.

I really wish liberal arts degrees had more value.

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“There is your brother, naked, crying, and you stand there confused over the choice of an attractive floor covering.”

I did the community college thing for a few years before transferring out of state to a 4 year university, and it enabled me to get what would've been a 4-year degree in a year and 9 months (since I had almost no general ed left to do except for one science course, so I was able to focus almost exclusively on my major). Granted, I'm more than making up the difference with a full year of classes paying out of state tuition here in NM as a graduate student (this is my first term at an in-state rate, and it's so much better), but still...I got my BA very quickly, with very little debt to account for in its wake.

Why would you want to graduate so quickly? Calm down, enjoy high school while it lasts.

« Last Edit: February 13, 2013, 05:48:23 AM by Cyrillic »

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"Who wants to be consistent? The dullard and the doctrinaire, the tedious people who carry out their principles to the bitter end of action, to the reductio ad absurdum of practice. Not I."-Oscar Wilde, The Decay of Lying

Why would you want to graduate so quickly? Calm down, enjoy high school while it lasts.

I think, guessing from the answers in this thread, that university in the states is very different from here in Europe, so I'm not sure you or I saying enjoy high school while it lasts would mean the same thing over there. I mean, general ed in university? What's that even mean? Over here (and I had enough colleagues from other European countries to see that this seems broadly usual) it would be really strange to go to university and do anything other than concentrate on your major. Here you'd usually go to university after school, do an honours degree that takes 3 (sometimes 4) years, do no more than 1 third of your first year in a minor subject and the remaining two all in your major (obviously it's half and half all the way if you do a double major). I used to think it was really odd that the American speech therapists I worked with used to tell me that I learnt things whilst studying for my BSc in Psychology that they only learned in graduate school. Admittedly when I was given the choice I opted to concentrate on psycholinguistics so I did more than average, but even so... I get the impression that we seem to specialise much earlier, even in countries like Germany or Romania where school leaving qualifications are decidedly broader than English A Levels are.

James

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We owe greater gratitude to those who humble us, wrong us, and douse us with venom, than to those who nurse us with honour and sweet words, or feed us with tasty food and confections, for bile is the best medicine for our soul. - Elder Paisios of Mount Athos

Just to give you an example of how liberal arts degrees work over here (at least in my own case), for the college that I'm transferring to, the general education requirements involve humanities, math, foreign languages, english, social sciences, and natural sciences, and for my degree the school requires nearly 2 years of course work to complete. Some schools are more like a year and a half. Once I transfer, I could complete my major in a little over a year; some people (with different majors) could complete their major requirements in one year worth of work. For me to go to a regular 4 year school to take all the general ed stuff would cost a lot more than going to a 2 year community college, even though they both teach the same classes (Intro to Psychology, Intro to Art History, Intro to Sociology, Computer Technology, etc.). If I took those general education courses at the school I'm transferring to it would be over $27,000 for those two years. At the community college I'm finishing up at those two years cost probably about $9,000.

Taking a loan is the earthly equivalent of suckling at the devil's teat.

The ONLY reason to get a liberal arts degree ever is for personal gratification. It will rarely pan out into a decent job in your preferred field. I truly enjoyed college and the learning I got there. But I have no debt and no illusions on using my degree to get a job.

Don't go into debt (for anything) if you can avoid it, and you almost always can.

Save up the money to buy a used car. It may sound petty, but I really enjoyed telling the finance manager when I bought my latest car (used) that I was paying cash!!!!

I went to a community college first - it was cheap, and I lived at home. I got all of the core subjects out of the way. I also CLEPped as much as a possibly could, to save money.

It's not necessary to decide right now what you want to be when you grow up, unless you have a burning desire to do something in particular (doctor, pilot, fireman, ballet dancer etc.). I've had three totally different careers (healthcare, human resource management, and now working for a church organization writing and editing) and guess what? I have an English/liberal arts degree.

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"If but ten of us lead a holy life, we shall kindle a fire which shall light up the entire city."

General ed means college level courses like General Chemistry, College Algebra, Calculus I, college level composition, etc. Then there are a few things that really make no sense but serve to 'round out' your education such as almost everywhere requires a class or two in humanities, social sciences, etc. I literally learned nothing in Intro to Humanities, World Religion or Anthropology that I didn't already know and it would have been a lot better if I could have spent those 10 credits on learning something new.

The thread is depressing for many reasons aside from some of the terrible advice.

Enlighten us with your sagacious advice, master.

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"Who wants to be consistent? The dullard and the doctrinaire, the tedious people who carry out their principles to the bitter end of action, to the reductio ad absurdum of practice. Not I."-Oscar Wilde, The Decay of Lying

The thread is depressing for many reasons aside from some of the terrible advice.

Enlighten us with your sagacious advice, master.

It is particular to James and will be given as such, if it is asked for. But people have skewed ideas about leveraging debt, what education is (hence all the "teachers"), etc, and I am going to post the best advice so far . . .

James, remember when you ask advice from people who don't know you and don't have much experience dealing with what you are asking about, you are basically going to get more insight into their own past mistakes and regrets than any possible decent advice for yourself.

James, remember when you ask advice from people who don't know you and don't have much experience dealing with what you are asking about, you are basically going to get more insight into their own past mistakes and regrets than any possible decent advice for yourself.

^-------This is now the best advice in this thread.

Well this is true...

So NBD on getting school loans then and take your time?

« Last Edit: February 13, 2013, 12:52:04 PM by Achronos »

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“There is your brother, naked, crying, and you stand there confused over the choice of an attractive floor covering.”

Don't go into debt (for anything) if you can avoid it, and you almost always can.

This makes ZERO sense.

Let's say I offer you a loan right now for $100,000 dollars at an interest rate of 0%.

Would you take it? Especially, if I offer you repayment options which scale to your future ability to pay it back and even to be able to pause repayment under certain (very liberal) circumstances?

No. What would be the purpose? I'd still have to pay you back, on your terms. And this example makes zero sense as well. Unless you are in the habit of loaning money at 0%, or know a bank that will do so?

« Last Edit: February 13, 2013, 01:06:59 PM by katherineofdixie »

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"If but ten of us lead a holy life, we shall kindle a fire which shall light up the entire city."

Don't go into debt (for anything) if you can avoid it, and you almost always can.

This makes ZERO sense.

Let's say I offer you a loan right now for $100,000 dollars at an interest rate of 0%.

Would you take it? Especially, if I offer you repayment options which scale to your future ability to pay it back and even to be able to pause repayment under certain (very liberal) circumstances?

No. What would be the purpose? I'd still have to pay you back, on your terms. And this example makes zero sense as well. Unless you are in the habit of loaning money at 0%, or know a bank that will do so?

Effectively, absolutely. But, the point is that taking a loan in itself is not necessarily a bad idea. I know someone right now whose student loan interest is 0.8% on dollars borrowed over a decade ago (which means he is paying a charge now for dollars which are worth more than surcharge added to the dollars he is paying them now which makes his loan a windfall) and includes seven years in which he paid no interests or had to make any payments on the loan.

At what point and under which terms a loan makes differs incredibly for everyone. So just saying, never go into debt makes no sense. And unfortunately such shrill notion spill over into things like national budget where people worry about increasing debt without knowing this is often a wonderful and effective tool for economic growth.

James, remember when you ask advice from people who don't know you and don't have much experience dealing with what you are asking about, you are basically going to get more insight into their own past mistakes and regrets than any possible decent advice for yourself.

^-------This is now the best advice in this thread.

Well this is true...

So NBD on getting school loans then and take your time?

It depends on specifics which few of us have here and more than a few obviously are projecting their own limited experience into the world. Lotsa people have gotten "burned" on student loans, mortgages, etc. but this shouldn't blind one to the fact that they can be a rather effective method for achieving certain goals, often the only means.

Getting a trade? Awesome! In what? What is James suited for? Are the trades even sustainable in late capitalism?

Never be in debt? Awesome! Unless, you are given a loan which inflation will eat the interest you pay on the loan and you can further leverage that money with relatively little risk for enormous gains.

Take our dear James. He probably can't be a pharmacist, but has suggested he would like to.

What are the current trends in median income for pharmacists, employment projections, etc? Does it makes sense to get into $250k of debt (your payment which will be capped relative to salary and the interest rate low) to make $200k / year while staying out of the economy for say 10 years in which you would've earned over the course of those years maybe $450k?

James should calm down. Find some people who are experienced in such matters (good luck). And listen to Cyrillic to enjoy high school a little bit, if he can.

What I would do if I could go back in time is different than what I did. But what I wish I would've done might not make any sense for James.

And what I think most people should do might not be what James should do. In other words, it would be good if people knew someone fairly well before "helping" them, unless the advice is incredibly specific and in an area in which the person has an inarguable expertise.

Well the problem is people want the government to run like a business.

It just can't happen and that notion is extemely bizarre to me.

I agree with you on the education part, but my negativity about accruing debt from higher education is symptomatic. The fact we have treated it as a commodity has severely diminished any true value of the education and only serves as a means to $$$ and a "career". We live in an economy that getting a real education becomes secondary.

My earlier post reflects the problem that we should avert ourselves from education so we don't end up in servitude.

Isn't it sad that we live in a society where it's better to be debt free than actually having any meaning and purpose in ones life? So we increase the cost of school to obscene levels every year and get our children deeper into debt.

We have screwed our children and depend on their backs to carry the weight.

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“There is your brother, naked, crying, and you stand there confused over the choice of an attractive floor covering.”

Orthonorm, you're a genius about everything; do you have any specific advice for me? Some background on my situation; my parents probably won't be able to give me crap except a free place to live if I should go to college in the area, and I was planning on exploiting the race-card as much as possible to get economic aid and support programs.